Hierosgamos — the sacred marriage — occupies a structural position at the very centre of depth psychology's engagement with alchemy, mythology, and the phenomenology of psychic wholeness. Jung identified the term with the coniunctio oppositorum, treating it not as a literal sexual rite but as the archetypal image of the union of psychic opposites: Sol and Luna, conscious and unconscious, Logos and Eros, sponsus and sponsa. In his alchemical writings, most elaborately in Mysterium Coniunctionis and the commentary on Rosarium Philosophorum, he traces the hierosgamos from ancient cultic practice through Gnostic, Kabbalistic, and Hermetic currents, arguing that alchemists allegorized the conjunctio as a ritual cohabitation that projected the inner drama of psychological integration onto matter. Von Franz extends this reading through the Aurora Consurgens, where the divine pair's union signals the breakthrough of the generative unconscious into consciousness and carries unmistakable intimations of immortality. Nichols emphasizes its inherently inner character — its incestuous symbolism marking it as an intrasubjective event rather than an external alliance. Jung himself drew the complementary concept against Neumann's notion of incest, insisting that the pair incest/hierosgamos must be held together to do justice to the full situation. Personal testimony surfaces in Memories, Dreams, Reflections, where Jung describes his own visionary experience of the mystic marriage in Kabbalistic imagery as paradigmatically real. The term thus traverses clinical, mythological, and confessional registers throughout the corpus.
In the library
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the coniunctio was allegorized as the hierosgamos, the ritual cohabitation of Sol and Luna. From this Jungian sprang the filius sapientiae or filius philosophorum, the transformed Mercurius
Jung identifies hierosgamos as the alchemical allegory for the coniunctio of Sol and Luna, the union from which the transformed philosophical son emerges.
The motif of the hierosgamos, or mystic marriage of the opposites, is a familiar one in alchemical symbolism… That the hierosgamos is an inner happening rather than an outer sexual alliance is emphasized by its incestuous nature.
Nichols argues that the hierosgamos is fundamentally an intrapsychic event, and that its incestuous symbolism underscores its quality as a union within one's own psychic family rather than a literal outer encounter.
Nichols, Sallie, Jung and Tarot: An Archetypal Journey, 1980thesis
It is the same with incest, for which reason I had to supplement it with the concept of the hierosgamos. Just as the pair of concepts 'incest/hierosgamos' describes the whole situation
Jung explains in direct correspondence that hierosgamos is the necessary complement to the incest concept, together constituting a complete description of the psychic situation.
It is the same with incest, for which reason I had to supplement it with the concept of the hierosgamos. Just as the pair of concepts 'incest/hierosgamos' describes the whole situation
In a parallel letter, Jung reiterates that hierosgamos complements incest symbolically, together forming an adequate conceptual dyad for the full psychic situation.
Jung, C. G., Letters Volume 2, 1951-1961, 1975thesis
In Aurora we have the same primordial image of the hierosgamos… At the sight of the hierosgamos the visionary is seized with a feeling of immortality: he is granted 'befitting holiness and also length of days'
Von Franz reads the Aurora Consurgens as presenting hierosgamos as the primordial divine image whose contemplation grants a felt sense of immortality and reveals the eternal foundation of the Godhead.
von Franz, Marie-Louise, Aurora Consurgens: A Document Attributed to Thomas Aquinas on the Problem of Opposites in Alchemy, 1966thesis
The archetypal image of a divine pair and of their hierosgamos fills the text from now on, god and goddess consummate the mystic marriage, and a pagan joie de vivre breaks through in words that border on the heretical.
Von Franz identifies the moment when the hierosgamos archetype takes over the Aurora Consurgens, marking a liberation from conventional religious constraint and an emotionally direct acceptance of the anima.
von Franz, Marie-Louise, Aurora Consurgens: A Document Attributed to Thomas Aquinas on the Problem of Opposites in Alchemy, 1966thesis
It was the mystic marriage as it appears in the Cabbalistic tradition. I cannot tell you how wonderful it was… At bottom it was I myself: I was the marriage.
Jung records a personal visionary experience of the hierosgamos in Kabbalistic terms, identifying himself with the marriage itself and testifying to its numinous reality as a lived psychic event.
Jung, Carl Gustav, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, 1963thesis
Both texts point to a hierosgamos which presupposes a kind of consanguineous relationship between sponsus and sponsa. The relationship between Adam and Eve is as close as it is difficult to define.
Jung demonstrates that alchemical and scriptural texts converge on a hierosgamos rooted in the quasi-incestuous, primordially close relation between Adam and Eve as sponsus and sponsa.
Jung, Carl Gustav, Mysterium Coniunctionis: An Inquiry into the Separation and Synthesis of Psychic Opposites in Alchemy, 1955thesis
hieros gamos/sacred marriage, 438, 439, 447f, 462 first step to incarnation, 462… Sophia/Yahweh, 393, 397, 448
The index to Psychology and Religion maps the hieros gamos across its multiple mythological instantiations — Sophia/Yahweh, Israel/Yahweh, the Marriage of the Lamb — treating it as the first step toward divine incarnation.
Jung, Carl Gustav, Psychology and Religion: West and East, 1958supporting
hierosgamos, 123, 155, 180ff, 183, 257 of light and darkness, 161
The index to Alchemical Studies situates hierosgamos across multiple page clusters and explicitly notes its manifestation as a union of light and darkness, widening its range beyond solar-lunar imagery.
Jung, Carl Gustav, Alchemical Studies, 1967supporting
The index to The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious cross-references hieros gamos with entries on the anima, hermaphrodite, and hero myths, indicating its structural role within the collective unconscious.
Jung, Carl Gustav, The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious, 1959supporting
Heaven and earth, which were separated at the beginning of creation, are to be rejoined, healing the split in the psyche and reconnecting ego and Self ('the tabernacle of God is with men').
Edinger reads the Marriage of the Lamb in Revelation as a coniunctio image of eschatological wholeness — the rejoining of heaven and earth that heals the primordial split between ego and Self.
Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985supporting
Samuels's index locates hierosgamos in the context of discussions of incest and individuation in marriage, indicating its currency as a structural concept among post-Jungian theorists.
Samuels, Andrew, Jung and the Post-Jungians, 1985aside